AU2008237590B2 - Data processing apparatus and method - Google Patents

Data processing apparatus and method Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU2008237590B2
AU2008237590B2 AU2008237590A AU2008237590A AU2008237590B2 AU 2008237590 B2 AU2008237590 B2 AU 2008237590B2 AU 2008237590 A AU2008237590 A AU 2008237590A AU 2008237590 A AU2008237590 A AU 2008237590A AU 2008237590 B2 AU2008237590 B2 AU 2008237590B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
address
sub
ofdm
symbols
data symbols
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Active
Application number
AU2008237590A
Other versions
AU2008237590A1 (en
Inventor
Samuel Asanbeng Atungsiri
Matthew Paul Athol Taylor
John Nicholas Wilson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Sony Corp
Original Assignee
Sony Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB0721270A external-priority patent/GB2454194A/en
Priority claimed from GB0721269.9A external-priority patent/GB2454193B/en
Application filed by Sony Corp filed Critical Sony Corp
Publication of AU2008237590A1 publication Critical patent/AU2008237590A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2008237590B2 publication Critical patent/AU2008237590B2/en
Active legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/27Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes using interleaving techniques
    • H03M13/276Interleaving address generation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/27Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes using interleaving techniques
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/27Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes using interleaving techniques
    • H03M13/2739Permutation polynomial interleaver, e.g. quadratic permutation polynomial [QPP] interleaver and quadratic congruence interleaver
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/27Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes using interleaving techniques
    • H03M13/2782Interleaver implementations, which reduce the amount of required interleaving memory
    • H03M13/2785Interleaver using in-place interleaving, i.e. writing to and reading from the memory is performed at the same memory location
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/65Purpose and implementation aspects
    • H03M13/6522Intended application, e.g. transmission or communication standard
    • H03M13/6552DVB-T2
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L1/00Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
    • H04L1/004Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received by using forward error control
    • H04L1/0056Systems characterized by the type of code used
    • H04L1/0071Use of interleaving
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F7/00Methods or arrangements for processing data by operating upon the order or content of the data handled
    • G06F7/58Random or pseudo-random number generators
    • G06F7/582Pseudo-random number generators
    • G06F7/584Pseudo-random number generators using finite field arithmetic, e.g. using a linear feedback shift register
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/03Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words
    • H03M13/05Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words using block codes, i.e. a predetermined number of check bits joined to a predetermined number of information bits
    • H03M13/11Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words using block codes, i.e. a predetermined number of check bits joined to a predetermined number of information bits using multiple parity bits
    • H03M13/1102Codes on graphs and decoding on graphs, e.g. low-density parity check [LDPC] codes
    • H03M13/1148Structural properties of the code parity-check or generator matrix
    • H03M13/116Quasi-cyclic LDPC [QC-LDPC] codes, i.e. the parity-check matrix being composed of permutation or circulant sub-matrices
    • H03M13/1165QC-LDPC codes as defined for the digital video broadcasting [DVB] specifications, e.g. DVB-Satellite [DVB-S2]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/03Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words
    • H03M13/05Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words using block codes, i.e. a predetermined number of check bits joined to a predetermined number of information bits
    • H03M13/13Linear codes
    • H03M13/15Cyclic codes, i.e. cyclic shifts of codewords produce other codewords, e.g. codes defined by a generator polynomial, Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem [BCH] codes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/03Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words
    • H03M13/05Error detection or forward error correction by redundancy in data representation, i.e. code words containing more digits than the source words using block codes, i.e. a predetermined number of check bits joined to a predetermined number of information bits
    • H03M13/13Linear codes
    • H03M13/15Cyclic codes, i.e. cyclic shifts of codewords produce other codewords, e.g. codes defined by a generator polynomial, Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem [BCH] codes
    • H03M13/151Cyclic codes, i.e. cyclic shifts of codewords produce other codewords, e.g. codes defined by a generator polynomial, Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem [BCH] codes using error location or error correction polynomials
    • H03M13/152Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem [BCH] codes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03MCODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
    • H03M13/00Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes
    • H03M13/29Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes combining two or more codes or code structures, e.g. product codes, generalised product codes, concatenated codes, inner and outer codes
    • H03M13/2906Coding, decoding or code conversion, for error detection or error correction; Coding theory basic assumptions; Coding bounds; Error probability evaluation methods; Channel models; Simulation or testing of codes combining two or more codes or code structures, e.g. product codes, generalised product codes, concatenated codes, inner and outer codes using block codes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/24Systems for the transmission of television signals using pulse code modulation

Abstract

DATA PROCESSING APPARATUS AND METHOD A data processor maps input symbols to be communicated onto a 5 predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol. The data processor includes an interleaver memory which reads-in the predetermined number of data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals. The interleaver memory reads-out the data symbols on to the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order 10 than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are interleaved on to the sub-carrier signals. The set of addresses are generated from an address generator which comprises a linear feedback shift register and a permutation circuit. A generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register is R [8]= R _,[0]@ R_[4), and a permutation code is provided for permuting 15 the order of the content of the register stages. The permutation code has been established by simulation analysis to optimise communication performance via typical radio channels. As such, a 1K operating is provided with an interleaver, which can interleave data symbols onto approximately one thousand sub-carriers of OFDM symbols for an OFDM modulated system such as a Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB) 20 standard such as DVB-Terrestrial2 (DVB-T2). [Fig. 5 for abstract]

Description

S&F Ref: 870313 AUSTRALIA PATENTS ACT 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR A STANDARD PATENT Name and Address Sony Corporation, of 1-7-1, Konan, Minato-ku, Tokyo, of Applicant : 108-0075, Japan Actual Inventor(s): Matthew Paul Athol Taylor Samuel Asanbeng Atungsiri John Nicholas Wilson Address for Service: Spruson & Ferguson St Martins Tower Level 35 31 Market Street Sydney NSW 2000 (CCN 3710000177) Invention Title: Data processing apparatus and method The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me/us: 5845c(1825371_1):RGG P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx I DATA PROCESSING APPARATUS AND METHOD Field of Invention The present invention relates to data processing apparatus operable to map input data symbols onto sub-carrier signals of Orthogonal Frequency Division 5 Multiplexed (OFDM) symbols. The present invention also relates to an address generator for use in writing symbols to/reading symbols from an interleaver memory. The present invention also relates to data processing apparatus operable to map data symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of OFDM symbols into an output symbol stream. 10 Embodiments of the present invention can provide an OFDM transmitter/receiver. Background of the Invention The Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial standard (DVB-T) utilises Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) to communicate data 15 representing video images and sound to receivers via a broadcast radio communications signal. There are known to be two modes for the DVB-T standard which are known as the 2k and the 8k mode. The 2k mode provides 2048 sub-carriers whereas the 8k mode provides 8192 sub-carriers. Similarly for the Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld standard (DVB-H) a 4k mode has been provided, in which the 20 number of sub-carriers is 4096. In order to improve the integrity of data communicated using DVB-T or DVB H a symbol interleaver is provided in order to interleave input data symbols as these symbols are mapped onto the sub-carrier signals of an OFDM symbol. Such a symbol interleaver comprises an interleaver memory in combination with an address generator. 25 The address generator generates an address for each of the input symbols, each address indicating one of the sub-carrier signals of the OFDM symbol onto which the data symbol is to be mapped. For the 2k mode and the 8k mode an arrangement has been disclosed in the DVB-T standard for generating the addresses for the mapping. Likewise for the 4k mode of DVB-H standard, an arrangement for generating 30 addresses for the mapping has been provided and an address generator for P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 2 implementing this mapping is disclosed in European Patent application 04251667.4. The address generator comprises a linear feed back shift register which is operable to generate a pseudo random bit sequence and a permutation circuit. The permutation circuit permutes the order of the content of the linear feed back shift register in order 5 to generate an address. The address provides an indication of a memory location of the interleaver memory for writing the input data symbol into or reading the input data symbol out from the interleaver memory for mapping onto one of the sub-carrier signal of the OFDM symbol. Similarly, an address generator in the receiver is arranged to generate addresses of the interleaver memory for writing the received data symbols 10 into or reading the data symbols out from the interleaver memory to form an output data stream. In accordance with a further development of the Digital Video Broadcasting Terrestrial broadcasting standard, known as DVB-T2 there has been proposed that further modes for communicating data be provided.
P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 3 Summary of Invention According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided a data processing apparatus operable to map input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division 5 Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol. The data processing apparatus comprises an interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of input data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read-out of the interleaver memory the input data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping. The read-out is in a different order than the read-in, the order being 10 determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals. The set of addresses is determined by an address generator, an address being generated for each of the input symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped. The address generator comprises a linear feedback shift register including a 15 predetermined number of register stages and is operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, and a permutation circuit and a control unit. The permutation circuit is operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers. 20 The control unit is operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address. The data processing apparatus is characterised in that the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear 25 feedback shift register of R[8]= R.
1 [o0] R>[4), and the permutation code forms with an additional bit, a ten bit address R, [n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R[n] in accordance with the table: R'i bit positions 18 [7 16 15 14 3 12 1 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 -4 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a transmitter for transmitting data using Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), the transmitter including a data processing apparatus operable to map input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the data processing apparatus comprising an interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to readout of the interleaver memory the data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of [8]= R'_, [O]ER>_ [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R, [n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 0 5 6 7 8 Although it is known within the DVB-T standard to provide the 2k mode and the 8k mode, and the DVB-H standard provides a 4k mode, there has been 5996606_ 1 - 4a proposed to provide a 1 k mode for DVB-T2. While the 8k mode provides an arrangement for establishing a single frequency network with sufficient guard periods to accommodate larger propagation delays between DVB transmits, the 2k mode is known to provide an advantage to mobile applications. This is because the 2k symbol period is only one quarter of the 8k symbol period, allowing the channel estimation to be more frequently updated allowing the receiver to track the time variation of the channel due to doppler and other effects more accurately. The 2k mode is therefore advantageous for mobile applications. However, it has been proposed that an OFDM communications system according to the DVB-T2 standard is required to communicate in even harsher environments, which require a receiver to perform with greater time variations in the communications channel, such as mobile applications. Therefore a 1k mode has been proposed, although with the 1k mode a multiple frequency network will be required complicating an arrangement of transmitters to provide a broadcast system. However, in order to provide the I k mode, a symbol interleaver must be provided for mapping the input data symbols onto the sub-carrier signals of the OFDM symbol. A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of mapping input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the method comprising reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of input data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the memory the input data symbols for the OFDM sub carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein 5996606_ I - 4b the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R [8]=R,.;[0]eR,.;[4], and the permutation code forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Rjn] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table; R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of transmitting input data symbols via a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the method comprising receiving a predetermined number of the input data symbols for mapping onto the predetermined number of sub-carrier signals, reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the input data symbol is to be mapped, the generating the set of address comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation order to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and 5996606_ 1 - 4c twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R [8]=RI_ [0]eR,.;[4,j and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R[n]for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R,[n]in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'i bit positions 8 7 6 54 3 2 110 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a data processing apparatus operable to map data symbols received from a predetermined number of sub carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the data processing apparatus comprising: a de-interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read out of the memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received data symbols to indicate the OFDM and sub carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped into the output symbol stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four. the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R [8]=R'_,[0]eR_ [4], and the permutation code forms, 5996606_11 - 4d with an additional bit, a ten bit address Rn] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R [n] in accordance with the table: Ri bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a receiver for receiving data from Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) modulated signal, the receiver including a data processing apparatus operable to map data symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the data processing apparatus comprising a de-interleaver operable to read-into an Interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the data symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the data symbol is received is to be mapped from the interleaver memory into the output symbol stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re-generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8]=R_ [0]GR 4 14], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R,[n] for the i-th data 5996606_ 1 - 4e symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R [n]in accordance with the table: R's bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides an address generator for use in receiving data symbols interleaved onto sub-carriers of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed symbol, the address generator being operable to generate a set of addresses, each address being generated for each of the data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals from which the received data symbol is to be mapped from all interleaver memory into an output data stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re-generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8] = R, 1 _ [0] R,_ 1 [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R,[n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 R bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of mapping symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the method comprising reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, 5996606 I I - 4f reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received data symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped from the interleaver memory into the output symbol stream, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of, R' [8] = R, [O]&R , [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R,/n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n] in accordance with the table: R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 11 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 A further aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of receiving data from Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing OFDM modulated symbols, the method including receiving a predetermined number of data symbols from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals from the OFDM symbols for forming an output data stream, reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being 5996606 11 - 4g determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped into the output symbol stream, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R [81= R, [0]JR_, [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R, [n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 R, bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 The present disclosure further provides a data processing apparatus operable as a symbol interleaver for mapping data symbols to be communicated on an OFDM symbol, having substantially one thousand sub-carrier signals. In one embodiment the number of sub-carrier signals may be a value between seven hundred and one thousand and twenty four. Furthermore, the OFDM symbols may include pilot sub carriers, which are arranged to carry known symbols, and the predetermined maximum valid address depends on a number of the pilot sub-carrier symbols present in the OFDM symbol. As such the 1k mode can be provided for example for a DVB standard, such as DVB-T2, DVB-T or DVB-H. Mapping data symbols to be transmitted onto the sub-carrier signals of an OFDM symbol, where the number of sub-carrier signals is approximately one thousand, represents a technical problem requiring simulation analysis and testing to establish an appropriate generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register and the permutation order. This is because the mapping requires that the symbols are 5996606_11 P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 5 interleaved onto the sub-carrier signals with the effect that successive symbols from the input data stream are separated in frequency by a greatest possible amount in order to optimise the performance of error correction coding schemes. Error correction coding schemes such as LDPC/BCH coding, which has been 5 proposed for DVB-T2 perform better when noise and degradation of the symbol values resulting from communication is un-correlated. Terrestrial broadcast channels may suffer from correlated fading in both the time and the frequency domains. As such by separating encoded symbols on to different sub-carrier signals of the OFDM symbol by as much as possible, the performance of error correction coding schemes can be 10 increased. As will be explained, it has been discovered from simulation performance analysis that the generator polynomial for the linear feed back shift register in combination with the permutation circuit order indicated above, provides a good performance. Furthermore, by providing an arrangement which can implement 15 address generating for each of the 2k mode, the 4k mode and the 8k mode by changing the taps of the generator polynomial for the linear feed back shift register and the permutation order, a cost effective implementation of the symbol interleaver for the 1k mode can be provided. Furthermore, a transmitter and a receiver can be changed between the 1k mode, 2k mode, 4k mode, the 8k mode and the 16k mode by changing 20 the generator polynomial and the permutation orders. This can be effected in software (or by the embedded signalling) whereby a flexible implementation is provided. The additional bit, which is used to form the address from the content of the linear feedback shift register, may be produced by a toggle circuit, which changes from 1 to 0 for each address, so as to reduce a likelihood that if an address exceeds the 25 predetermined maximum valid address, then the next address will be a valid address. In one example the additional bit is the most significant bit. In one example the above permutation code is used to generate the addresses for performing the interleaving for successive OFDM symbols. In other examples, the above permutation code is one of a plurality of permutation codes which are changed 30 so as to reduce a possibility that successive or data bits which are close in order in an input data stream are mapped onto the same sub-carrier of an OFDM symbol. In one example, a different permutation code is used for performing the interleaving between P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 6 successive OFDM symbols. The use of different permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols can provide an advantage where the data processing apparatus is operable to interleave the input data symbols onto the sub-carrier signals of both even and odd OFDM symbols for a transmitter only by reading in the data symbols into the 5 memory in a sequential order and reading out the data symbols from the memory in accordance with the set of addresses generated by the address generator and for a receiver only by reading in the data symbols into the memory in accordance with the set of addresses generated by the address generator and reading out the data symbols from the memory in a sequential order. 10 Various aspects and features of the present invention are defined in the appended claims. Further aspects of the present invention include a data processing apparatus and method operable to map symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, as well as a transmitter and a receiver. 15 Brief Description of Drawings Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like parts are provided with corresponding reference numerals, and in which: Figure 1 is a schematic block diagram of a Coded OFDM transmitter which 20 may be used, for example, with the DVB-T2 standard; Figure 2 is a schematic block diagram of parts of the transmitter shown in Figure 1 in which a symbol mapper and a frame builder illustrate the operation of an interleaver; Figure 3 is a schematic block diagram of the symbol interleaver shown in 25 Figure 2; Figure 4 is a schematic block diagram of an interleaver memory shown in Figure 3 and the corresponding symbol de-interleaver in the receiver; Figure 5 is a schematic block diagram of an address generator shown in Figure 3 for the 1k mode; 30 Figure 6(a) is diagram illustrating results for an interleaver using the address generator shown in Figure 5 for even symbols and Figure 6(b) is a diagram illustrating P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 7 design simulation results for odd symbols, whereas Figure 6(c) is a diagram illustrating comparative results for an address generator using a different permutation code for even and Figure 6(d) is a corresponding diagram for odd symbols; Figure 7 is a schematic block diagram of a Coded OFDM receiver which may 5 be used, for example, with the DVB-T2 standard; Figure 8 is a schematic block diagram of a symbol de-interleaver which appears in Figure 7; Figure 9(a) is diagram illustrating results for an interleaver for even OFDM symbols and Figure 9(b) is a diagram illustrating results for odd OFDM symbols; 10 Figure 10 provides a schematic block diagram of the symbol interleaver shown in Figure 3, illustrating an operating mode in which interleaving is performed in accordance with an odd interleaving mode only; and Figure I1 provides a schematic block diagram of the symbol de-interleaver shown in Figure 8, illustrating the operating mode in which interleaving is performed 15 in accordance with the odd interleaving mode only.
P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 8 Description of Preferred Embodiments It has been proposed that the number of modes, which are available within the DVB-T2 standard should be extended to include a 1k mode, a 16k mode and a 32k mode. The following description is provided to illustrate the operation of a symbol 5 interleaver in accordance with the present technique, although it will be appreciated that the symbol interleaver can be used with other modes and other DVB standards. Figure 1 provides an example block diagram of a Coded OFDM transmitter which may be used for example to transmit video images and audio signals in accordance with the DVB-T2 standard. In Figure 1 a program source generates data to 10 be transmitted by the COFDM transmitter. A video coder 2, and audio coder 4 and a data coder 6 generate video, audio and other data to be transmitted which are fed to a program multiplexer 10. The output of the program multiplexer 10 forms a multiplexed stream with other information required to communicate the video, audio and other data. The multiplexer 10 provides a stream on a connecting channel 12. 15 There may be many such multiplexed streams which are fed into different branches A, B etc. For simplicity, only branch A will be described. As shown in Figure 1 a COFDM transmitter 20 receives the stream at a multiplexer adaptation and energy dispersal block 22. The multiplexer adaptation and energy dispersal block 22 randomises the data and feeds the appropriate data to a 20 forward error correction encoder 24 which performs error correction encoding of the stream. A bit interleaver 26 is provided to interleave the encoded data bits which for the example of DVB-T2 is the LDCP/BCH encoder output. The output from the bit interleaver 26 is fed to a bit into constellation mapper 28, which maps groups of bits onto a constellation point, which is to be used for conveying the encoded data bits. 25 The outputs from the bit into constellation mapper 28 are constellation point labels that represent real and imaginary components. The constellation point labels represent data symbols formed from two or more bits depending on the modulation scheme used. These will be referred to as data cells. These data cells are passed through a time interleaver 30 whose effect is to interleaver data cells resulting from multiple LDPC 30 code words.
P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 9 The data cells are received by a frame builder 32, with data cells produced by branch B etc in Figure 1, via other channels 31. The frame builder 32 then forms many data cells into sequences to be conveyed on COFDM symbols, where a COFDM symbol comprises a number of data cells, each data cell being mapped onto one of the 5 sub-carriers. The number of sub-carriers will depend on the mode of operation of the system, which may include one of 1k, 2k, 4k, 8k, 16k or 32k, each of which provides a different number of sub-carriers according, for example to the following table: Mode Sub-carriers 1K 756 Y. 2 7 - 1512 * 4K 3024 6048 16K 12096 32K 24192 Number of Sub-carriers Adapted from DVB-T/H 10 Thus in one example, the number of sub-carriers for the 1k mode is seven hundred and fifty six. For the DVB-T2 system, the number of sub-carriers per OFDM symbol can vary depending upon the number of pilot and other reserved carriers. Thus, in DVB-T2, unlike in DVB-T, the number of sub-carriers for carrying data is not 15 fixed. Broadcasters can select one of the operating modes from lk, 2k, 4k, 8k, 16k, 32k each providing a range of sub-carriers for data per OFDM symbol, the maximum available for each of these modes being 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, 32768 respectively. In DVB-T2 a physical layer frame is composed of many OFDM symbols. Typically the frame starts with one or more preamble or P2 OFDM symbols, 20 which are then followed by a number payload carrying OFDM symbols. The end of the physical layer frame is marked by a frame closing symbols. For each operating mode, the number of sub-carriers may be different for each type of symbol. Furthermore, this may vary for each according to whether bandwidth extension is selected, whether tone reservation is enabled and according to which pilot sub-carrier 25 pattern has been selected. As such a generalisation to a specific number of sub-carriers per OFDM symbol is difficult. However, the frequency interleaver for each mode can interleave any symbol whose number of sub-carriers is smaller than or the same as the P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 10 maximum available number of sub-carriers for the given mode. For example, in the 1k mode, the interleaver would work for symbols with the number of sub-carriers being less than or equal to 1024 and for 16k mode, with the number of sub-carriers being less than or equal to 16384. 5 The sequence of data cells to be carried in each COFDM symbol is then passed to the symbol interleaver 33. The COFDM symbol is then generated by a COFDM symbol builder block 37 which introduces pilot and synchronising signals fed from a pilot and embedded signal former 36. An OFDM modulator 38 then forms the OFDM symbol in the time domain which is fed to a guard insertion processor 40 for 10 generating a guard interval between symbols, and then to a digital to analogue convertor 42 and finally to an RF amplifier within an RF front end 44 for eventual broadcast by the COFDM transmitter from an antenna 46. Providing a 1k Mode 15 To create a new IK mode, several elements are to be defined, one of which is the 1K symbol interleaver 33. The bit to constellation mapper 28, symbol interleaver 33 and the frame builder 32 are shown in more detail in Figure 2. As explained above, the present invention provides a facility for providing a quasi-optimal mapping of the data symbols onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals. 20 According to the example technique the symbol interleaver is provided to effect the optimal mapping of input data symbols onto COFDM sub-carrier signals in accordance with a permutation code and generator polynomial, which has been verified by simulation analysis. As shown in Figure 2 a more detailed example illustration of the bit to symbol 25 constellation mapper 28 and the frame builder 32 is provided to illustrate an example embodiment of the present technique. Data bits received from the bit interleaver 26 via a channel 62 are grouped into sets of bits to be mapped onto a data cell, in accordance with a number of bits per symbol provided by the modulation scheme. The groups of bits, which forms a data word, are fed in parallel via data channels 64 the a 30 mapping processor 66. The mapping processor 66 then selects one of the data symbols, in accordance with a pre-assigned mapping. The constellation point, is P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 1I represented by a real and an imaginary component that is provided to the output channel 29 as one of a set of inputs to the frame builder 32. The frame builder 32 receives the data cells from the bit to constellation mapper 28 through channel 29, together with data cells from the other channels 31. 5 After building a frame of many COFDM cell sequences, the cells of each COFDM symbol are then written into an interleaver memory 100 and read out of the interleaver memory 100 in accordance with write addresses and read addresses generated by an address generator 102. According to the write-in and read-out order, interleaving of the data cells is achieved, by generating appropriate addresses. The operation of the 10 address generator 102 and the interleaver memory 100 will be described in more detail shortly with reference to Figures 3, 4 and 5. The interleaved data cells are then combined with pilot and synchronisation symbols received from the pilot and embedded signalling former 36 into an OFDM symbol builder 37, to form the COFDM symbol, which is fed to the OFDM modulator 38 as explained above. 15 Interleaver Figure 3 provides an example of parts of the symbol interleaver 33, which illustrates the present technique for interleaving symbols. In Figure 3 the input data cells from the frame builder 32 are written into the interleaver memory 100. The data cells are written into the interleaver memory 100 according to a write address fed from 20 the address generator 102 on channel 104, and read out from the interleaver memory 100 according to a read address fed from the address generator 102 on a channel 106. The address generator 102 generates the write address and the read address as explained below, depending on whether the COFDM symbol is odd or even, which is identified from a signal fed from a channel 108, and depending on a selected mode, 25 which is identified from a signal fed from a channel 110. As explained, the mode can be one of a 1k mode, 2k mode, 4k mode, 8k mode, 16k mode or a 32k mode. As explained below, the write address and the read address are generated differently for odd and even symbols as explained with reference to Figure 4, which provides an example implementation of the interleaver memory 100. 30 In the example shown in Figure 4, the interleaver memory is shown to comprise an upper part 100 illustrating the operation of the interleaver memory in the P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 12 transmitter and a lower part 340, which illustrates the operation of the de-interleaver memory in the receiver. The interleaver 100 and the de-interleaver 340 are shown together in Figure 4 in order to facilitate understanding of their operation. As shown in Figure 4 a representation of the communication between the interleaver 100 and the 5 de-interleaver 340 via other devices and via a transmission channel has been simplified and represented as a section 140 between the interleaver 100 and the de-interleaver 340. The operation of the interleaver 100 is described in the following paragraphs: Although Figure 4 provides an illustration of only four input data cells onto an example of four sub-carrier signals of a COFDM symbol, it will be appreciated that the 10 technique illustrated in Figure 4 can be extended to a larger number of sub-carriers such as 756 for the 1k mode 1512 for the 2k mode, 3024 for the 4k mode and 6048 for the 8k mode, 12096 for the 16k mode and 24192 for the 32k mode. The input and output addressing of the interleaver memory 100 shown in Figure 4 is shown for odd and even symbols. For an even COFDM symbol the data 15 cells are taken from the input channel 77 and written into the interleaver memory 124.1 in accordance with a sequence of addresses 120 generated for each COFDM symbol by the address generator 102. The write addresses are applied for the even symbol so that as illustrated interleaving is effected by the shuffling of the write-in addresses. Therefore, for each interleaved symbol y(h(q)) = y'(q). 20 For odd symbols the same interleaver memory 124.2 is used. However, as shown in Figure 4 for the odd symbol the write-in order 132 is in the same address sequence used to read out the previous even symbol 126. This feature allows the odd and even symbol interleaver implementations to only use one interleaver memory 100 provided the read-out operation for a given address is performed before the write-in 25 operation. The data cells written into the interleaver memory 124 during odd symbols are then read out in a sequence 134 generated by the address generator 102 for the next even COFDM symbol and so on. Thus only one address is generated per symbol, with the read-in and write-out for the odd/even COFDM symbol being performed contemporaneously. 30 In summary, as represented in Figure 4, once the set of addresses H(q) has been calculated for all active sub-carriers, the input vector Y' = (y0', y1', Y2',---yNmax-l') is processed to produce the interleaved vector Y = (y0, yl, Y2,---yNmax-1) defined by: P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 13 YH(q) = Y'q for even symbols for q = 0,...,Nmax-I Yq = 'H(q) for odd symbols for q = 0,...,Nmax-I In other words, for even OFDM symbols the input words are written in a 5 permutated way into a memory and read back in a sequential way, whereas for odd symbols, they are written sequentially and read back permutated. In the above case, the permutation H(q) is defined by the following table: q 10 1 2 3 H(q) 1 3 0 2 Table 1: permutation for simple case where Nmax =4 10 As shown in Figure 4, the de-interleaver 340 operates to reverse the interleaving applied by the interleaver 100, by applying the same set of addresses as generated by an equivalent address generator, but applying the write-in and read-out addresses in reverse. As such, for even symbols, the write-in addresses 342 are in sequential order, whereas the read out address 344 are provided by the address 15 generator. Correspondingly, for the odd symbols, the write-in order 346 is determined from the set of addresses generated by the address generator, whereas read out 348 is in sequential order. Address Generation for the 1k Mode A schematic block diagram of the algorithm used to generate the permutation 20 function H(q) is represented in Figure 5 for the 1K mode. An implementation of the address generator 102 for the 1k mode is shown in Figure 5. In Figure 5 a linear feed back shift register is formed by nine register stages 200 and a xor-gate 202 which is connected to the stages of the shift register 200 in accordance with a generator polynomial. Therefore, in accordance with the content of 25 the shift register 200 a next bit of the shift register is provided from the output of the xor-gate 202 by xoring the content of shift register R[0] and register stage R[4]according to the generator polynomial: R [8]|= )_,[0|@ RD _-1[4] According to the generator polynomial a pseudo random bit sequence is 30 generated from the content of the shift register 200. However, in order to generate an P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 14 address for the 1k mode as illustrated, a permutation circuit 210 is provided which effectively permutes the order of the bits within the shift register 200 from an order R'i[n] to an order Ri[n] at the output of the permutation circuit 210. Nine bits from the output of the permutation circuit 210 are then fed on a connecting channel 212 to 5 which is added a most significant bit via a channel 214 which is provided by a toggle circuit 218. A ten bit address is therefore generated on channel 212. However, in order to ensure the authenticity of an address, an address check circuit 216 analyses the generated address to determine whether it exceeds a predetermined maximum value. The predetermined maximum value may correspond to the maximum number of sub 10 carrier signals, which are available for data symbols within the COFDM symbol, available for the mode which is being used. However, the interleaver for the 1k mode may also be used for other modes, so that the address generator 102 may also be used for the 2k mode, 4k mode, 8k mode, 16k mode and the 32k mode, by adjusting accordingly the number of the maximum valid address. 15 If the generated address exceeds the predetermined maximum value then a control signal is generated by the address check unit 216 and fed via a connecting channel 220 to a control unit 224. If the generated address exceeds the predetermined maximum value then this address is rejected and a new address regenerated for the particular symbol. 20 For the Ik mode, an (Nr - 1) bit word R'; is defined, with Nr= 10g Mmax, where Mmax = 1024 using a LFSR (Linear Feedback Shift Register). The polynomial used to generate this sequence is: 1K mode: R[8]= R 1 _[0]@R _ 1 [4] where i varies from 0 to Mmax - 1 25 Once one R'i, word has been generated, the R'i, word goes through a permutation to produce another (Nr - 1) bit word called Ri. Ri is derived from R'; by the bit permutations given as follows: ~R'ibitpoitions 8 u t 6 th 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 14 13 12 11 0 15 16 7 18 1 Bit permutation for the 1 K mode P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 15 As an example, this means that for the mode 1K, the bit number 8 of R'i is sent into bit position number 4 of Ri. The address H(q) is then derived from Ri through the following equation: H(q) = (i mod2)- 2N,-1 + 2R, ()- 2i j=0 5 The (i mod2)- 2',- part of the above equation is represented in Figure 5 by the toggle block T 218. An address check is then performed on H(q) to verify that the generated address is within the range of acceptable addresses: if (H(q)<Nmax), where Nmax = 756 in the 1K mode for example, then the address is valid. If the address is not valid, 10 the control unit is informed and it will try to generate a new H(q) by incrementing the index i. The role of the toggle block is to make sure that we do not generate an address exceeding Nmax twice in a row. In effect, if an exceeding value was generated, this means that the MSB (i.e. the toggle bit) of the address H(q) was one. So the next value 15 generated will have a MSB set to zero, insuring to produce a valid address. The following equations sum up the overall behaviour and help to understand the loop structure of this algorithm: q = 0; for (i = 0; i < Mmax; i = i + 1) N,-2 20 {H(q) = (i mod2) -2 N,-1 + lRioj) -23; j=O if (H(q)<Nmax) q = q+l;} As will be explained shortly, in one example of the address generator, the above mentioned permutation code is used for generating addresses for all OFDM symbols. In another example, the permutation codes may be changed between 25 symbols, with the effect that a set of permutation codes are cycled through for successive OFMD symbols. To this end, the control lines 108, 110 providing an indication as to whether the OFDM symbol is odd or even and the current mode are used to select the permutation code. This example mode in which a plurality of P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 16 permutation codes are cycled through is particularly appropriate for the example in which the odd interleaver only is used, which will be explained later. A signal indicating that a different permutation code should be used is provided via a control channel 11l. In one example the possible permutation codes are pre-stored in the 5 permutation code circuit 210. In another example, the control unit 224 supplies the new permutation code to be used for an OFDM symbol. Analysis Supporting the Address Generator for the 1k Mode The selection of the polynomial generator and the permutation code explained above for the address generator 102 for the 1k mode has been identified following 10 simulation analysis of the relative performance of the interleaver. The relative performance of the interleaver has been evaluated using a relative ability of the interleaver to separate successive symbols or an "interleaving quality". As mentioned above, effectively the interleaving must perform for both odd and even symbols, in order to use a single interleaver memory. The relative measure of the interleaver 15 quality is determined by defining a distance D (in number of sub-carriers). A criterion C is chosen to identify a number of sub-carriers that are at distance s D at the output of the interleaver that were at distance D at the input of the interleaver, the number of sub-carriers for each distance D then being weighted with respect to the relative distance. The criterion C is evaluated for both odd and even COFDM symbols. 20 Minimising C produces a superior quality interleaver. d-D d=D C = ZNv(d)/ d + Noss(d)/d where: Neven(d) and Now(d) are number of sub-carriers in an even and odd symbol respectively at the output of the interleaver that remain within d sub-carrier 25 spacing of each other. Analysis of the interleaver identified above for the 1k mode for a value of D = 5 is shown in Figure 6(a) for the even COFDM symbols and in Figure 6(b) for the odd COFDM symbol. According to the above analysis, the value of C for the permutation code identified above for the 1k mode produced a value of C = 24, that the weighted P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 17 number of sub-carriers with symbols which are separated by five or less in the output according to the above equation was 24. A corresponding analysis is provided for an alternative permutation code for even COFDM symbols in Figure 6(c) for odd COFDM symbols in Figure 6(d). As 5 can be seen in comparison to the results illustrated in Figures 6(a) and 6(b), there are more components present which represent symbols separated by small distances such as D = 1, and D = 2, when compared with the results shown in Figure 6(a) and 6(b), illustrating that the permutation code identified above for the 1k mode symbol interleaver produces a superior quality interleaver. 10 Alternative Permutation Codes The following ten alternative possible codes ([n]Ri bit positions, where n = I to 10) have been found to provide a symbol interleaver with a good quality as determined by the criterion C identified above. R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 [I Ri bit positions 5 3 2 1 0 6 7 4 8 [2]Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 6 7 5 8 [3]Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 7 6 8 [4]Ribitpositions 3 2 1 5 0 6 4 7 8 [5]Ri bit positions 4 2 3 0 1 7 5 8 6 [6]Ri bit positions 4 2 3 0 1 5 7 8 6 [7]Ri bit positions 4 2 3 0 1 5 6 8 7 [8]R bitpositions 3 2 5 0 1 4 7 8 6 [9]Ri bit positions 4 2 3 0 1 5 7 8 6 [I 0]Ribit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 Bit permutation for the 1K mode 15 Receiver P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 18 Figure 7 provides an example illustration of a receiver which may be used with the present technique. As shown in Figure 7, a COFDM signal is received by an antenna 300 and detected by a tuner 302 and converted into a digital form by an analogue-to-digital converter 304. A guard interval removal processor 306 removes 5 the guard interval from a received COFDM symbol, before the data is recovered from the COFDM symbol using a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processor 308 in combination with a channel estimator and correction 310 in co-operation with a embedded-signalling decoding unit 311, in accordance with known techniques. The demodulated data is recovered from a mapper 312 and fed to a symbol de-interleaver 10 314, which operates to effect the reverse mapping of the received data symbol to re generate an output data stream with the data de-interleaved. The symbol de-interleaver 314 is formed from a data processing apparatus as shown in Figure 7 with an interleaver memory 540 and an address generator 542. The interleaver memory is as shown in Figure 4 and operates as already explained above to 15 effect de-interleaving by utilising sets of addresses generated by the address generator 542. The address generator 542 is formed as shown in Figure 8 and is arranged to generate corresponding addresses to map the data symbols recovered from each COFDM sub-carrier signals into an output data stream. The remaining parts of the COFDM receiver shown in Figure 7 are provided to 20 effect error correction decoding 318 to correct errors and recover an estimate of the source data. One advantage provided by the present technique for both the receiver and the transmitter is that a symbol interleaver and a symbol de-interleaver operating in the receivers and transmitters can be switched between the 1k, 2k, 4k, 8k, 16k and the 32k 25 mode by changing the generator polynomials and the permutation order. Hence the address generator 542 shown in Figure 8 includes an input 544, providing an indication of the mode as well as an input 546 indicating whether there are odd/even COFDM symbols. A flexible implementation is thereby provided because a symbol interleaver and de-interleaver can be formed as shown in Figures 3 and 8, with an 30 address generator as illustrated in either of Figures 5. The address generator can therefore be adapted to the different modes by changing to the generator polynomials and the permutation orders indicated for each of the modes. For example, this can be P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 19 effected using a software change. Alternatively, in other embodiments, an embedded signal indicating the mode of the DVB-T2 transmission can be detected in the receiver in the embedded-signalling processing unit 311 and used to configure automatically the symbol de-interleaver in accordance with the detected mode. 5 Optimal Use of Odd Interleavers As shown in Figure 4, two symbol interleaving processes, one for even COFDM symbols and one for odd COFDM symbols allows the amount of memory used during interleaving to be reduced. In the example shown in Figure 4, the write in order for the odd symbol is the same as the read out order for the even symbol 10 therefore, while an odd symbol is being read from the memory, an even symbol can be written to the location just read from; subsequently, when that even symbol is read from the memory, the following odd symbol can be written to the location just read from. As mentioned above, during an experimental analysis of the performance of the 15 interleavers (using criterion C as defined above) and for example shown in Figure 9(a) and Figure 9(b) it has been discovered that the interleaving schemes designed for the 2k and 8k symbol interleavers for DVB-T and the 4k symbol interleaver for DVB-H work better for odd symbols than even symbols. Thus from performance evaluation results of the interleavers, for example, as illustrated by Figures 9(a) and 9(b) have 20 revealed that the odd interleavers work better than the even interleavers. This can be seen by comparing Figure 9(a) which shows results for an interleaver for even symbols and Figure 9(b) illustrating results for odd symbols: it can be seen that the average distance at the interleaver output of sub-carriers that were adjacent at the interleaver input is greater for an interleaver for odd symbols than an interleaver for even 25 symbols. As will be understood, the amount of interleaver memory required to implement a symbol interleaver is dependent on the number of data symbols to be mapped onto the COFDM carrier symbols. Thus a 16k mode symbol interleaver requires half the memory required to implement a 32k mode symbol interleaver and 30 similarly, the amount of memory required to implement an 8k symbol interleaver is half that required to implement a 16k interleaver. Therefore a transmitter or receiver which is arranged to implement a symbol interleaver of a mode, which sets the P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 20 maximum number of data symbols which can be carried per OFDM symbol, then that receiver or transmitter will include sufficient memory to implement two odd interleaving processes for any other mode, which provides half or smaller than half the number of sub-carriers per OFDM symbol in that given maximum mode. For example 5 a receiver or transmitter including a 32K interleaver will have enough memory to accommodate two 16K odd interleaving processes each with their own 16K memory. Therefore, in order to exploit the better performance of the odd interleaving processes, a symbol interleaver capable of accommodating multiple modulation modes can be arranged so that only an odd symbol interleaving process is used if in a mode 10 which comprises half or less than half of the number of sub-carriers in a maximum mode, which represents the maximum number of sub-carriers per OFDM symbol. This maximum mode therefore sets the maximum memory size. For example, in a transmitter/receiver capable of the 32K mode, when operating in a mode with fewer carriers (i.e. 16K, 8K, 4K or 1K) then rather than employing separate odd and even 15 symbol interleaving processes, two odd interleavers would be used. An illustration of an adaptation of the symbol interleaver 33 which is shown in Figure 3 when interleaving input data symbols onto the sub-carriers of OFDM symbols in the odd interleaving mode only is shown in Figure 10. The symbol interleaver 33.1 corresponds exactly to the symbol interleaver 33 as shown in Figure 3, except that the 20 address generator 102.1 is adapted to perform the odd interleaving process only. For the example shown in Figure 10, the symbol interleaver 33.1 is operating in a mode where the number of data symbols which can be carried per OFDM symbol is less than half of the maximum number which can be carried by an OFDM symbol in an operating mode with the largest number of sub-carriers per OFDM symbol. As such, 25 the symbol interleaver 33.1 has been arranged to partition the interleaver memory 100. For the present illustration shown in Figure 10 the interleaver memory then 100 is divided into two parts 401, 402. As an illustration of the symbol interleaver 33.1 operating in a mode in which data symbols are mapped onto the OFDM symbols using the odd interleaving process, Figure 10 provides an expanded view of each half of the 30 interleaver memory 401, 402. The expanded provides an illustration of the odd interleaving mode as represented for the transmitter side for four symbols A, B, C, D reproduced from Figure 4. Thus as shown in Figure 10, for successive sets of first and P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 21 second data symbols, the data symbols are written into the interleaver memory 401, 402 in a sequential order and read out in accordance with addresses generated by the address generator 102 in a permuted order in accordance with the addresses generated by the address generator as previously explained. Thus as illustrated in Figure 10, 5 since an odd interleaving process is being performed for successive sets of first and second sets of data symbols, the interleaver memory must be partitioned into two parts. Symbols from a first set of data symbols are written into a first half of the interleaver memory 401, and symbols from a second set of data symbols are written into a second part of the interleaver memory 402, because the symbol interleaver is no longer able to 10 reuse the same parts of the symbol interleaver memory as can be accommodated when operating in an odd and even mode of interleaving. A corresponding example of the interleaver in the receiver, which appears in Figure 8 but adapted to operate with an odd interleaving process only is shown in Figure 11. As shown in Figure 11 the interleaver memory 540 is divided into two 15 halves 410, 412 and the address generator 542 is adapted to write data symbols into the interleaver memory and read data symbols from the interleaver memory into respective parts of the memory 410, 402 for successive sets of data symbols to implement an odd interleaving process only. Therefore, in correspondence with representation shown in Figure 10, Figure 11 shows the mapping of the interleaving process which is 20 performed at the receiver and illustrated in Figure 4 as an expanded view operating for both the first and second halves of the interleaving memory 410, 412. Thus a first set of data symbols are written into a first part of the interleaver memory 410 in a permuted order defined in accordance with the addresses generated by the address generator 542 as illustrated by the order of writing in the data symbols which provides 25 a write sequence of 1, 3, 0, 2. As illustrated the data symbols are then read out of the first part of the interleaver memory 410 in a sequential order thus recovering the original sequence A, B, C, D. Correspondingly, a second subsequent set of data symbols which are recovered from a successive OFDM symbol are written into the second half of the interleaver 30 memory 412 in accordance with the addresses generated by the address generator 542 in a permuted order and read out into the output data stream in a sequential order.
P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 22 In one example the addresses generated for a first set of data symbols to write into the first half of the interleaver memory 410 can be reused to write a second subsequent set of data symbols into the interleaver memory 412. Correspondingly, the transmitter may also reuse addresses generated for one half of the interleaver for a first 5 set of data symbols for reading out a second set of data symbols which have been written into the second half of the memory in sequential order. Odd Interleaver with Offset The performance of an interleaver, which uses two odd interleavers could be further improved by using a sequence of odd only interleavers rather than a single odd 10 only interleaver, so that any bit of data input to the interleave does not always modulate the same carrier in the OFDM symbol. A sequence of odd only interleavers could be realised by either: * adding an offset to the interleaver address modulo the number of data carriers, or 15 e using a sequence of permutations in the interleaver Adding an Offset Adding an offset to the interleaver address modulo the number of data carriers effectively shifts and wraps-round the OFDM symbol so that any bit of data input to the interleaver does not always modulate the same carrier in the OFDM symbol. Thus 20 the address generator, could optionally include an offset generator, which generates an offset in an address generated by the address generator on the output channel H(q). The offset would change each symbol. For example, this offset could provide be a cyclic sequence. This cyclic sequence could be, for example, of length 4 and could consist of, for example, prime numbers. For example, such a sequence could be: 25 0,41,97, 157 Furthermore, the offset may be a random sequence, which may be generated by another address generator from a similar OFDM symbol interleaver or may be generated by some other means. Using a Sequence of Permutations P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 23 As shown in Figures 5, a control line Il extends from the control unit of the address generator to the permutation circuit. As mentioned above, in one example the address generator can apply a different permutation code from a set of permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols. Using a sequence of permutations in the 5 interleaver address generator reduces a likelihood that any bit of data input to the interleaver does not always modulate the same sub-carrier in the OFDM symbol. For example, this could be a cyclic sequence, so that a different permutation code in a set of permutation codes in a sequence is used for successive OFDM symbols and then repeated. This cyclic sequence could be, for example, of length two or four. 10 For the example of the 16K symbol interleaver a sequence of two permutation codes which are cycled through per OFDM symbol could be for example: 8432011151210679 7953111402121086 whereas a sequence of four permutation codes could be: 15 8432011151210679 7953111402121086 6117523011081294 5129031024678111 The switching of one permutation code to another could be effected in response 20 to a change in the Odd/Even signal indicated on the control channel 108. In response the control unit 224 changes the permutation code in the permutation code circuit 210 via the control line I 11. For the example of a 1k symbol interleaver, two permutation codes could be: 432105678 25 325014786 whereas four permutation codes could be: 432105678 325014786 753826140 30 168253407 Other combinations of sequences may be possible for 2k, 4k and 8k carrier modes or indeed 0.5k carrier mode. For example, the following permutation codes for P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 24 each of the 0.5k, 2k, 4k and 8k provide good de-correlation of symbols and can be used cyclically to generate the offset to the address generated by an address generator for each of the respective modes: 2k Mode: 5 0751826934* 4832901567 8390215746 7048369152 10 4k Mode: 710581 249036** 627 108034 1 95 954231010687 14 10 3 9 7 2 6 5 0 8 15 8k Mode: 5 113 0 10 8 6 9 2 4 1 7 * 10854291067311 11698472101053 20 83117915640210 For the permutation codes indicated above, the first two could be used in a two sequence cycle, whereas all four could be used for a four sequence cycle. In addition, some further sequences of four permutation codes, which are cycled through to provide the offset in an address generator to produce a good de-correlation in the 25 interleaved symbols (some are common to the above) are provided below: 0.5k Mode: 37461205 42573016 53604127 30 61052743 2k Mode: P031656AU Ik Tx/Rx 25 0751826934* 3270158496 4832901567 7395210648 5 4k Mode: 710581249036** 6 2 7 10 8 0 3 4 1 9 5 103412706859 10 089510463217 8k Mode: 5 11 3 0 10 8 6 9 2 4 17* 81076052139411 15 11369274105108 10817560114293 *these are the permutations in the DVB-T standard **these are the permutations in the DVB-H standard 20 Examples of address generators, and corresponding interleavers, for the 2k, 4k and 8k modes are disclosed in European patent application number 04251667.4, the contents of which are incorporated herein be reference. An address generator for the 0.5k mode are disclosed in our co-pending UK patent application number 0722553.5. Various modifications may be made to the embodiments described above 25 without departing from the scope of the present invention. In particular, the example representation of the generator polynomial and the permutation order which have been used to represent aspects of the invention are not intended to be limiting and extend to equivalent forms of the generator polynomial and the permutation order. As will be appreciated the transmitter and receiver shown in Figures 1 and 7 30 respectively are provided as illustrations only and are not intended to be limiting. For example, it will be appreciated that the position of the symbol interleaver and the de interleaver with respect, for example to the bit interleaver and the mapper can be P031656AU lk Tx/Rx 26 changed. As will be appreciated the effect of the interleaver and de-interleaver is un changed by its relative position, although the interleaver may be interleaving I/Q symbols instead of v-bit vectors. A corresponding change may be made in the receiver. Accordingly the interleaver and de-interleaver may be operating on different 5 data types, and may be positioned differently to the position described in the example embodiments. As explained above the permutation codes and generator polynomial of the interleaver, which has been described with reference to an implementation of a particular mode, can equally be applied to other modes, by changing the predetermined 10 maximum allowed address in accordance with the number of sub-carriers for that mode. As mentioned above, embodiments of the present invention find application with DVB standards such as DVB-T, DVB-T2 and DVB-H, which are incorporated herein by reference. For example embodiments of the present invention may be used 15 in a transmitter or receiver operating in accordance with the DVB-H standard, in hand held mobile terminals. The mobile terminals may be integrated with mobile telephones (whether second, third or higher generation) or Personal Digital Assistants or Tablet PCs for example. Such mobile terminals may be capable of receiving DVB-H or DVB TMT2 compatible signals inside buildings or on the move in for example cars or trains, 20 even at high speeds. The mobile terminals may be, for example, powered by batteries, mains electricity or low voltage DC supply or powered from a car battery. Services that may be provided by DVB-H may include voice, messaging, internet browsing, radio, still and/or moving video images, television services, interactive services, video or near-video on demand and option. The services might operate in combination with 25 one another. In other examples embodiments of the present invention finds application with the DVB-T2 standard as specified in accordance with ETSI standard EN 302 755. In other examples embodiments of the present invention find application with the cable transmission standard known as DVB-C2. However, it will be appreciated that the present invention is not limited to application with DVB and may be extended to 30 other standards for transmission or reception, both fixed and mobile.

Claims (30)

1. A data processing apparatus operable to map input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the data processing apparatus comprising an interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of the input data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub carrier signals, and to read-out of the interleaver memory the input data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped, the address generator comprising linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8]= R [0]$R> [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R, [n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: 5996606_ 1 - 28 R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
2. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is a value between seven hundred and one thousand and twenty four.
3. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the OFDM symbol includes pilot sub-carriers, which are arranged to carry known symbols, and the predetermined maximum valid address depends on a number of the pilot sub carrier symbols present in the OFDM symbol.
4. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the interleaver memory is operable to effect the mapping of the input data symbols onto the sub-carrier signals for even OFDM symbols by reading in the data symbols according to the set of addresses generated by the address generator and reading out in a sequential order, and for odd OFDM symbols by reading in the symbols into the interleaver memory in a sequential order and reading out the data symbols from the memory in accordance with the set of addresses generated by the address generator.
5. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the permutation circuit is operable to change the permutation code, which permutes the order of the bits of the register stages to form the addresses from one OFDM symbol to another.
6. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 5, wherein the permutation circuit is operable to cycle through a sequence of different permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols.
7. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 6, wherein the sequence of permutation codes comprises two permutation codes, which are: R i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 R bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 and 5996606 11 -29 R'i bit positions 8 76 5 4 3 2 1 0 R bit positions 3 2 5 0 1 4 7 8 6
8. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 6 or 7, wherein the sub-carriers of the OFDM symbols are half or less than half a maximum number of sub-carriers in the OFDM symbols of any of a plurality of operating modes, and the input data symbols include first sets of input data symbols for mapping onto even OFDM symbols and second sets of input data symbols for mapping onto odd OFDM symbols, and the data processing apparatus is operable to interleave the input data symbols from both first and second sets in accordance with an odd interleaving process, the odd interleaving process including writing the first sets of input data symbols into a first part of the interleaver memory in accordance with a sequential order of the first sets of input data symbols, reading out the first sets of input data symbols from the first part of the interleaver memory on to the sub-carrier signals of the even OFDM symbols in accordance with an order defined by the set of addresses generated with one of the permutation codes of the sequence, writing the second set of input data symbols into a second part of the interleaver memory in accordance with a sequential order of the second sets of input data symbols, and reading out the second sets of input data symbols from the second part of the interleaver memory on to the sub-carrier signals of the odd OFDM symbols in accordance with an order defined by the set of addresses generated with another of the permutation codes of the sequence.
9. A transmitter for transmitting data using Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), the transmitter including a data processing apparatus operable to map input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the data processing apparatus comprising an interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, 5996606_ 1 - 30 an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R [8]= R 1 [0]IR _, [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R[n]or the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R; [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'j bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 32 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 56 7 8
10. A transmitter as claimed in Claim 9, wherein the transmitter is operable to transmit data in accordance with a Digital Video Broadcasting standard such as the Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld standard, the Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial2 standard or the Digital Video Broadcasting Cable2 standard.
11. A method of mapping input data symbols to be communicated onto a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the method comprising reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of input data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the memory the input data symbols for the OFDM sub carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols 5996606_ 1 -31 are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the data symbol is to be mapped, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8]=R,.;[O]R,_.[4], and the permutation code forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R[n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table; R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
12. A method as claimed in Claim 11, wherein the using a permutation circuit to receive the content of the shift register stages and permuting the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, including changing the permutation code, which permutes the order of the bits of the register stages to form the addresses, from one OFDM symbol to another, wherein the changing the permutation code includes cycling through a sequence of different permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols, the sequence of permutation codes comprising two permutation codes, which are: R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 and R' bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 5996606_ 1 -32 Ri bit positions 3 2 5 0 1 4 7 8 6
13. A method of transmitting input data symbols via a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol, the method comprising receiving a predetermined number of the input data symbols for mapping onto the predetermined number of sub-carrier signals, reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols for mapping onto the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols for the OFDM sub-carriers to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the input data symbols are interleaved on the sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the input data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals onto which the input data symbol is to be mapped, the generating the set of address comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation order to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R'[8]=R> _[0]'R.4] and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Ri[n]for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n]in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8 5996606_ I - 33
14. A method of transmitting as claimed in Claim 13, wherein the transmitting is in accordance with a Digital Video Broadcasting standard such as the Digital Video Broadcasting- Terrestrial, Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld standard, the Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial2 standard or the Digital Video Broadcasting Cable2 standard.
1 5. A data processing apparatus operable to map data symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the data processing apparatus comprising: a de-interleaver operable to read-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read out of the memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received data symbols to indicate the OFDM and sub carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped into the output symbol stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four. the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8]=R, 1 [0]&R> [4], and the permutation code forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address R[n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n th register stage Ri[n]in accordance with the table: 5996606_11 - 34 Ri bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
16. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 15, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is a value between seven hundred and one thousand and twenty four.
17. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 15, wherein the OFDM symbol includes pilot sub-carriers, which are arranged to carry known symbols, and the predetermined maximum valid address depends on a number of the pilot sub-carrier symbols present in the OFDM symbol.
18. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 15, wherein the de interleaver memory is arranged to effect the mapping of the received data symbols from the sub-carrier signals onto the output data stream for even OFDM symbols by reading in the data symbols according to a sequential order and reading out the data symbols from memory according to the set of addresses generated by the address generator, and for odd OFDM symbols by reading in the symbols into the memory in accordance with the set of addresses generated by the address generator and reading out the data symbols from the memory in accordance with a sequential order.
19. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 15, wherein the permutation circuit is operable to change the permutation code, which permutes the order of the bits of the register stages to form the addresses from one OFDM symbol to another.
20. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 19, wherein the permutation circuit is operable to cycle through a sequence of different permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols.
21. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 19, wherein the sequence of permutation codes comprises two permutation codes, which are: R', bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 13 2 1 Ri bit positions 4 ,3 2 1 0 15 16 78 and R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 3 2 5 0 1 4 7 8 6 5996606 I I - 35
22. A data processing apparatus as claimed in Claim 20 or 21, wherein the sub-carriers of the OFDM symbols are half or less than half a maximum number of sub-carriers in the OFDM symbols of any of a plurality of operating modes, and the data symbols include first sets of data symbols received from even OFDM symbols and second sets of data symbols received from odd OFDM symbols, and the data processing apparatus is operable to de interleave the first and second sets of data symbols into the output data stream in accordance with an odd interleaving process, the odd interleaving process including writing the first sets of data symbols received from the sub-carriers of the even OFDM symbols into a first part of the interleaver memory in accordance with an order determined by the set of addresses generated with on" of the permutation codes of the sequence, reading out the first sets of data symbols from the first part of the interleaver memory into the output data stream in accordance with a sequential order of the first sets of input data symbols, writing the second set of data symbols received from the sub-carriers of the odd OFDM symbols into a second part of the interleaver memory in accordance with an order defied by the set of addresses generated with another of the permutation codes of the sequence, and reading out the second sets of data symbols from the second part of the interleaver memory into the output data stream in accordance with a sequential order of the second sets of input data symbols.
23. A receiver for receiving data from Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) modulated signal, the receiver including a data processing apparatus operable to map data symbols received from a predetermined number of sub carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the data processing apparatus comprising a de-interleaver operable to read-into an Interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and to read-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to - effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, 5996606 I I - 36 an address generator operable to generate the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the data symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the data symbol is received is to be mapped from the interleaver memory into the output symbol stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address of one of the OFDM sub-carriers, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re-generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8]=RI_, []Ril [4), and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Ri[n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R,[n]in accordance with the table: R'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 32 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
24. A receiver as claimed in Claim 23 wherein the receiver is operable to receive data which has been modulated in accordance with a Digital Video Broadcasting standard such as the Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial, Digital Video Broadcasting-Handheld, the Digital Video Broadcasting-Terrestrial2 standard or the Digital Video Broadcasting-Cable2 standard.
25. An address generator for use in receiving data symbols interleaved onto sub-carriers of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed symbol, the address generator being operable to generate a set of addresses, each address being generated for each of the data symbols to indicate one of the sub-carrier signals from which the received data symbol is to be mapped from all interleaver memory into an output data stream, the address generator comprising a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of 5996606_ 1 - 37 register stages and being operable to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, a permutation circuit operable to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and a control unit operable in combination with an address check circuit to re-generate an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of Ri [8]= Ri_, [0]eRI_, [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Ri[nJfor the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage Ri [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R's bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
26. A method of mapping symbols received from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals of an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) symbol into an output symbol stream, the method comprising reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received data symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped from the interleaver memory into the output symbol stream, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit to receive the content of the shift register 5996606 11 - 38 stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of, R, [8]= R, [0)jR, [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Ri[n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R,[n]in accordance with the table: R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 11 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
27 A method as claimed in Claim 26, wherein the changing the permutation code, which permutes the order of the bits of the register stages to form the addresses, from one OFDM symbol to another includes cycling through a sequence of different permutation codes,r which permutes the order of the bits of the register stages to form the addresses, from one OFDM symbol to another includes cycling through a sequence of different permutation codes for successive OFDM symbols, the sequence of permutation codes comprises two permutation codes, which are: R 'i bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 0 Ri bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 516 7 8 and R', bit positions 8 7 6 5 4J3 2 [0 Ri bit positions 3 2 5 0 4 7 8 6
28. A method as claimed in Claim 27, wherein the sub-carriers of the OFDM symbols are half or less than half a maximum number of sub-carriers in the OFDM symbols of any of a plurality of operating modes, the method comprising receiving first sets of data symbols from even OFDM symbols and second sets of data symbols from odd OFDM symbols, and the reading-into the interleaver memory the data symbols received from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, and the reading-out of the interleaver 5996606_ 1 -39 memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping is in accordance with an odd interleaving process, the odd interleaver process including writing the first- sets of data symbols received from the sub-carriers of the even OFDM symbols into a first part of the interleaver memory in accordance with an order determined by the set of addresses generated with one of the permutation codes of the sequence, reading out the first sets of data symbols from the first part of the interleaver memory into the output data stream in accordance with a sequential order of the first sets of input data symbols, writing the second set of data symbols received from the sub-carriers of the odd OFDM symbols into a second part of the interleaver memory in accordance with an order defined by the set of addresses generated with another of the permutation codes of the sequence, and reading out the second sets of data symbols from the second part of the interleaver memory into the output data stream in accordance with a sequential order of the second sets of input data symbols.
29. A method of receiving data from Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing OFDM modulated symbols, the method including receiving a predetermined number of data symbols from a predetermined number of sub-carrier signals from the OFDM symbols for forming an output data stream, reading-into an interleaver memory the predetermined number of data symbols from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, reading-out of the interleaver memory the data symbols into the output symbol stream to effect the mapping, the read-out being in a different order than the read-in, the order being determined from a set of addresses, with the effect that the data symbols are de-interleaved from the OFDM sub-carrier signals, generating the set of addresses, an address being generated for each of the received symbols to indicate the OFDM sub-carrier signal from which the received data symbol is to be mapped into the output symbol stream, the generating the set of addresses comprising using a linear feedback shift register including a predetermined number of register stages to generate a pseudo-random bit sequence in accordance with a generator polynomial, using a permutation circuit to receive the content of the shift register stages and to permute the bits present in the register stages in accordance with a permutation code to form an address, and re-generating an address when a generated address exceeds a predetermined 5996606 I I - 40 maximum valid address, wherein the predetermined maximum valid address is less than one thousand and twenty four, the linear feedback shift register has nine register stages with a generator polynomial for the linear feedback shift register of R, [8)= R, 1 [0](R _, 1 [4], and the permutation order forms, with an additional bit, a ten bit address Ri [n] for the i-th data symbol from the bit present in the n-th register stage R, [n] in accordance with a code defined by the table: R'; bit positions 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 R, bit positions 4 3 2 1 0 5 6 7 8
30. A method of receiving as claimed in Claim 28, wherein the receiving the data symbols from the sub-carrier signals of the OFDM symbols is in accordance with a Digital Video Broadcasting standard such as the Digital Video Broadcasting- Terrestrial, Digital Video Broadcasting Handheld, the Digital Video BroadcastingTerrestrial2 standard or the Digital Video Broadcasting-Cable2 standard. DATED this Second Day of March, 2012 Sony Corporation Patent Attorneys for the Applicant SPRUSON & FERGUSON 5996606_ 1
AU2008237590A 2007-10-30 2008-10-29 Data processing apparatus and method Active AU2008237590B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (8)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0721270A GB2454194A (en) 2007-10-30 2007-10-30 Address generation polynomial and permutation matrix for DVB-T2 1k OFDM sub-carrier mode interleaver
GB0721270.7 2007-10-30
GB0721269.9A GB2454193B (en) 2007-10-30 2007-10-30 Data processing apparatus and method
GB0721269.9 2007-10-30
GB0722645.9 2007-11-19
GB0722645A GB2455071A (en) 2007-10-30 2007-11-19 Memory efficient data symbol interleaver which adaptively applies odd only, or odd and even interleaving processes, depending on OFDM mode
GB0722728.3 2007-11-20
GB0722728A GB2454267A (en) 2007-10-30 2007-11-20 DVB interleaver for odd/even symbol streams splits memory for sub-carrier number up to half maximum/has common memory and immediate location reuse otherwise

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2008237590A1 AU2008237590A1 (en) 2009-05-14
AU2008237590B2 true AU2008237590B2 (en) 2012-03-29

Family

ID=40097846

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2008237590A Active AU2008237590B2 (en) 2007-10-30 2008-10-29 Data processing apparatus and method

Country Status (14)

Country Link
US (2) US8170091B2 (en)
EP (2) EP2056472B1 (en)
JP (1) JP5248983B2 (en)
KR (2) KR101461676B1 (en)
AT (2) ATE443376T1 (en)
AU (1) AU2008237590B2 (en)
DE (2) DE602008000382D1 (en)
DK (2) DK2056471T3 (en)
EA (1) EA014413B1 (en)
ES (2) ES2332836T3 (en)
GB (2) GB2454318B (en)
PL (2) PL2056471T3 (en)
PT (2) PT2056471E (en)
TW (2) TWI427954B (en)

Families Citing this family (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8885761B2 (en) 2003-03-25 2014-11-11 Sony Corporation Data processing apparatus and method
US8179954B2 (en) 2007-10-30 2012-05-15 Sony Corporation Odd interleaving only of an odd-even interleaver when half or less data subcarriers are active in a digital video broadcasting (DVB) standard
GB2454196B (en) * 2007-10-30 2012-10-10 Sony Corp Data processsing apparatus and method
GB2454193B (en) 2007-10-30 2012-07-18 Sony Corp Data processing apparatus and method
ES2562031T3 (en) 2007-10-30 2016-03-02 Sony Corporation Apparatus and method of data processing
GB2460459B (en) * 2008-05-30 2012-07-11 Sony Corp Data processing apparatus and method
JP2012004753A (en) 2010-06-15 2012-01-05 Funai Electric Co Ltd Television signal reception device
CN108923888B (en) 2013-06-19 2021-10-22 Lg 电子株式会社 Apparatus for transmitting and receiving broadcast signal, method for transmitting and receiving broadcast signal
GB2515801A (en) 2013-07-04 2015-01-07 Sony Corp Transmitter and receiver and methods of transmitting and receiving
CN103532892A (en) * 2013-09-27 2014-01-22 中国石油集团东方地球物理勘探有限责任公司 Communication coding method for marine oil exploration acoustic locating transponder
US10789165B2 (en) 2015-11-10 2020-09-29 Sony Corporation Data processing apparatus, and data processing method
WO2018187902A1 (en) 2017-04-10 2018-10-18 Qualcomm Incorporated An efficient interleaver design for polar codes
CN110838890B (en) * 2019-10-25 2022-02-08 晶晨半导体(上海)股份有限公司 Deinterleaving method and device
CN113259277B (en) * 2021-05-18 2023-02-28 成都图迅科技有限公司 Channel estimation method for 5G uplink PUSCH receiver
US20220385307A1 (en) * 2021-05-21 2022-12-01 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Interleaver design and pairwise codeword distance distribution enhancement for turbo autoencoder

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6353900B1 (en) * 1998-09-22 2002-03-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Coding system having state machine based interleaver
EP1463256A1 (en) * 2003-03-25 2004-09-29 Sony United Kingdom Limited Interleaver for mapping symbols on the carriers of an OFDM system

Family Cites Families (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB722553A (en) 1952-06-09 1955-01-26 Johannes Ditzel Improvements in or relating to feed or delivery devices for strip material
DK2302807T3 (en) * 1995-02-01 2013-07-29 Sony Corp Multichannel transmission with interleaving when addressing on-site RAM
DE69638276D1 (en) * 1995-02-01 2010-11-18 Sony Corp Data transmission with interleaving by in-place addressing of a RAM memory
JP2937919B2 (en) * 1997-01-16 1999-08-23 日本電気アイシーマイコンシステム株式会社 Pseudo random number generator
GB9821385D0 (en) 1998-10-01 1998-11-25 British Broadcasting Corp Improvements relating to measuring channel state from a received signal and discriminating digital values from a received signal,suitable for use in cofdm
US6625234B1 (en) * 1998-12-10 2003-09-23 Nortel Networks Limited Efficient implementations of proposed turbo code interleavers for third generation code division multiple access
US6314534B1 (en) * 1999-03-31 2001-11-06 Qualcomm Incorporated Generalized address generation for bit reversed random interleaving
CA2344014A1 (en) * 2000-04-12 2001-10-12 Yiyan Wu Method and system for broadcasting a digital data signal within an analog tv signal using orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
US7170849B1 (en) 2001-03-19 2007-01-30 Cisco Systems Wireless Networking (Australia) Pty Limited Interleaver, deinterleaver, interleaving method, and deinterleaving method for OFDM data
GB0110907D0 (en) 2001-05-03 2001-06-27 British Broadcasting Corp Improvements in decoders for many carrier signals, in particular in DVB-T recievers
US7620111B2 (en) * 2002-08-13 2009-11-17 Nokia Corporation Symbol interleaving
US8179954B2 (en) 2007-10-30 2012-05-15 Sony Corporation Odd interleaving only of an odd-even interleaver when half or less data subcarriers are active in a digital video broadcasting (DVB) standard
GB2454196B (en) 2007-10-30 2012-10-10 Sony Corp Data processsing apparatus and method
GB2454193B (en) 2007-10-30 2012-07-18 Sony Corp Data processing apparatus and method
KR100505694B1 (en) * 2003-07-09 2005-08-02 삼성전자주식회사 Apparatus for direct measurement of the channel state for the coded orthogonal frequency division multiplexing receiver and method thereof
DE602004016947D1 (en) * 2004-03-10 2008-11-20 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Address generator for a nesting memory and a deinterleaving memory
CN101091346B (en) * 2004-07-29 2014-07-09 高通股份有限公司 System and method for frequency diversity
KR100608913B1 (en) * 2004-11-10 2006-08-09 한국전자통신연구원 Apparatus and Method for Interleaving in OFDM Transmitter
US7543197B2 (en) * 2004-12-22 2009-06-02 Qualcomm Incorporated Pruned bit-reversal interleaver
TWI241779B (en) * 2004-12-24 2005-10-11 Univ Nat Sun Yat Sen Symbol deinterleaver for digital video broadcasting system
US7395461B2 (en) * 2005-05-18 2008-07-01 Seagate Technology Llc Low complexity pseudo-random interleaver
US7657818B2 (en) 2005-06-22 2010-02-02 Adaptive Spectrum And Signal Alignment, Inc. Dynamic minimum-memory interleaving
US7681092B2 (en) * 2006-04-11 2010-03-16 Sharp Laboratories Of America, Inc. Systems and methods for interleaving and deinterleaving data in an OFDMA-based communication system
EP2204002B1 (en) 2007-10-30 2013-05-01 Sony Corporation Data processing apparatus and method
ES2562031T3 (en) 2007-10-30 2016-03-02 Sony Corporation Apparatus and method of data processing
GB2460459B (en) 2008-05-30 2012-07-11 Sony Corp Data processing apparatus and method
US7945746B2 (en) * 2008-06-02 2011-05-17 Newport Media, Inc. Memory sharing of time and frequency de-interleaver for ISDB-T receivers

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6353900B1 (en) * 1998-09-22 2002-03-05 Qualcomm Incorporated Coding system having state machine based interleaver
EP1463256A1 (en) * 2003-03-25 2004-09-29 Sony United Kingdom Limited Interleaver for mapping symbols on the carriers of an OFDM system
EP1463255A1 (en) * 2003-03-25 2004-09-29 Sony United Kingdom Limited Interleaver for mapping symbols on the carriers of an OFDM system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ES2332836T3 (en) 2010-02-12
TWI442731B (en) 2014-06-21
US8320484B2 (en) 2012-11-27
AU2008237590A1 (en) 2009-05-14
EA014413B1 (en) 2010-12-30
US8170091B2 (en) 2012-05-01
GB2454317B (en) 2012-10-17
DK2056472T3 (en) 2010-04-19
EP2056472A1 (en) 2009-05-06
PL2056472T3 (en) 2010-05-31
US20090110095A1 (en) 2009-04-30
GB0819374D0 (en) 2008-11-26
TW200926657A (en) 2009-06-16
ES2336632T3 (en) 2010-04-14
EA200802075A1 (en) 2009-06-30
ATE443376T1 (en) 2009-10-15
KR101461676B1 (en) 2014-11-13
GB0819397D0 (en) 2008-11-26
PT2056472E (en) 2010-02-09
JP5248983B2 (en) 2013-07-31
GB2454318B (en) 2012-10-17
KR20090045103A (en) 2009-05-07
KR20090045102A (en) 2009-05-07
PL2056471T3 (en) 2010-02-26
DE602008000382D1 (en) 2010-01-21
KR101520486B1 (en) 2015-05-14
PT2056471E (en) 2009-10-29
JP2009112010A (en) 2009-05-21
GB2454317A (en) 2009-05-06
DE602008000145D1 (en) 2009-10-29
DK2056471T3 (en) 2009-11-30
TWI427954B (en) 2014-02-21
EP2056471A1 (en) 2009-05-06
ATE451753T1 (en) 2009-12-15
EP2056471B1 (en) 2009-09-16
TW200926658A (en) 2009-06-16
US20120099665A1 (en) 2012-04-26
GB2454318A (en) 2009-05-06
EP2056472B1 (en) 2009-12-09

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
USRE48147E1 (en) 16K mode interleaver in a digital video broadcasting (DVB) standard
AU2008237590B2 (en) Data processing apparatus and method
AU2008237593B2 (en) Data processing apparatus and method
AU2008230049B2 (en) Data processing apparatus and method
GB2454195A (en) Address generation polynomial and permutation matrix for DVB-T2 16k OFDM sub-carrier mode interleaver
GB2462749A (en) Symbol to sub-carrier interleaver for DVB-T2 using odd interleaving
ZA200809255B (en) Data processing apparatus and method
GB2462750A (en) Symbol to sub-carrier interleaver for DVB-T2 using odd interleaving

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FGA Letters patent sealed or granted (standard patent)